The ambitious plan requires building direct current transmission to connect the continents, but once in place – would make it possible to generate a very large amount of Europe’s electricity with renewable energy.

The plan has some critics. One; German Member of Parliament Hermann Scheer is worried about possible cost overruns. He calls Desertec a desert mirage; one that is politically and economically untested.

But Siemens CEO Peter Loescher says the project is no more far-fetched than the trans-Atlantic telegraphic cable laid by Siemens back in 1876.

Solar thermal power plants use the familiar concept of boiling water to produce steam to drive turbines that generate electricity. The difference is just what boils the water. Instead of burning up fossil fuels, solar thermal systems just use hundreds of mirrors for concentrating sunlight on one spot.

One big advantage of solar thermal plants is that heat can be stored at night or when the sun is not shining to continue producing power 24/7, making solar baseload power.

Abengoa is a pioneer in the construction of solar power plants in Northern Africa and the Middle East with two Integrated Solar Combined Cycle plants in Morocco and Algeria.

An Abengoa solar thermal plant in Spain as seen Flikr user Matteo Bonotto

About the Author

Susan Kraemer writes at CleanTechnica, CSP-Today and Renewable Energy World.
She has also been published at Wind Energy Update, Solar Plaza, EarthtechlingPV-Insider , and GreenProphet, Ecoseed, NRDC OnEarth, MatterNetwork, Celsius, EnergyNow, and Scientific American.
As a former serial entrepreneur in product design, Susan brings an innovator's perspective on inventing a carbon-constrained civilization: If necessity is the mother of invention, solving climate change is the mother of all necessities! As a lover of history and sci-fi, she enjoys chronicling the strange future we are creating in these interesting times.
Follow Susan on Twitter @dotcommodity.

I don’t get the comparison to the Trans-Atlantic cable. Its only about 15 km from Spain to Morocco. The Sahara desert is just a bit farther on, seems like a perfectly feasible plan to me, assuming political stability in the region.

Bud Bundy

I don’t get the comparison to the Trans-Atlantic cable. Its only about 15 km from Spain to Morocco. The Sahara desert is just a bit farther on, seems like a perfectly feasible plan to me, assuming political stability in the region.

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